GLM-4.7-Flash-Grande-42B-A3B-GGUF

119
2
license:mit
by
DavidAU
Language Model
OTHER
42B params
New
119 downloads
Early-stage
Edge AI:
Mobile
Laptop
Server
94GB+ RAM
Mobile
Laptop
Server
Quick Summary

AI model with specialized capabilities.

Device Compatibility

Mobile
4-6GB RAM
Laptop
16GB RAM
Server
GPU
Minimum Recommended
40GB+ RAM

Code Examples

text
Analyze the Request:
Genre: Science Fiction.
Title: "The Last Transmission".
Setting: Entirely within a spaceship's cockpit.
Characters: Sole surviving crew member.
Plot: Attempting to send a final message to Earth before power runs out.
Themes: Isolation, sacrifice, human connection.
Tone/Style: Emotional, immersive, potential for strong language (cursing) to enhance connection.
Length: 800-1000 words.


Character & Setting Development:

Protagonist: Kaelen (let's go with a male name, or neutral). He's exhausted, maybe a bit rough around the edges (hence the cursing allowance), but deeply lonely.
Setting: The Ares IV or Icarus. Let's call it the Icarus. The physical environment should reflect the internal state—reduced to basics, flickering lights, heavy atmosphere.
The "Other": The message log. Voices from home, recordings, or just the silence of the universe. Let's include a recording from a partner, Elena, to ground the sacrifice in something real.


Plot Outline:

Beginning (0-25%): Kaelen wakes up or tends to the ship. The gravity of the situation sets in. Establish the setting and the immediate physical state (power levels).
Rising Action (25-75%): The struggle to initiate the sequence. The physical and mental breakdown. The memories of Earth and the crew (specifically the partner). The power failing. The technical hurdles.
Climax (75-90%): The transmission. The moment of truth. The physical sensation of the act. The final words.
Falling Action (90-95%): The silence after. The realization of connection.
Resolution (95-100%): Closing the loop. Fade to black.


Drafting - Section by Section:

Opening: Start with the sensory details. The hum of the drive, the coldness. Kaelen is nursing a hand (classic sci-fi trope for injury/stress).

Drafting thought: "The gravity generators groaned." "Kaelen winced." "Red warning lights."
The Situation: The power is draining. He's the last one. The "Last Transmission" needs to be the goal.

Action: He needs to input the sequence. It needs to be complex but described simply.
Theme - Isolation: "The universe was vast and empty, a concept he used to dream about until he lived it."
The "Sacrifice" & "Connection": Flashbacks. He's not just sending data; he's sending soul. The idea of Earth needs to feel distant but close.

Cursing: Keep it realistic. "Damn it," "Shit," "Hell." It shows frustration and humanity.
Specific Memory: The recording from Earth. Let's make it a message from a past version of himself or his partner. Let's go with a recording he made 3 years ago. No, that's too hard to explain. A recording from Earth to him now, or just a recording he made of himself. Let's go with a recording he made of her (Elena) that he never sent because he was too busy surviving. No, he needs to send now.
The Technicalities: The radio is down. He has to bypass the relay or use the emergency backup. This gives a ticking clock.

Word choice: "Chaos theory," "entropy," "static."
The Climax: The power is critical. He hits the button.

Internal Monologue: "I miss you." "I'm sorry."
The Act: Typing the message. It shouldn't be a technical manual. It should be a confession. "I failed." "I miss coffee." "I love you."
The End: The ship powers down. The silence is the scariest part. But the message is out there. That's the sacrifice.


Writing - Focusing on Sensory Details and Pacing:

Sensory: The taste of copper (blood), the hum of the reactor, the blue light reflecting in his eyes.
Pacing: Slow down during the memories. Speed up during the technical struggle.
(Self-Correction during drafting): I initially thought about having him talk to a robot, but the prompt says "sole surviving crew member." A robot companion might make it too sci-fi/comedy and less "human connection." Better to have recorders or just him and the silence. Let's stick to just him.

The Message Content: What does he say? He needs to say he's not afraid, but he's lonely. He needs to say he felt the cold.



Refining the Narrative Arc:

Start with the physical action of checking the stabilizers.
Shift to the memory of the crash/attack (the "Adversity").
The attempt to send the signal (The Act).
The physical collapse (The Sacrifice).
The final transmission (The Connection).


Word Count Check & Language:

Ensure the word count is between 800-1000 words.
Insert the "curse words" naturally. "Son of a bitch" or "Damn it" fits the stress of the moment.


Final Polish:

Check: Did I do the "entirely within the cockpit" rule? Yes.
Check: Themes covered? Yes.
Check: Pacing? Let's make sure the ending hits hard.
(Drafting specific lines):

"The gravity drive hissed, a sound like a dying beast."
"He didn't need to look at the readout to know the power was in the red."


Execution (Mental Simulation of the text generation):

Kaelen rubs his face. The ship is a tomb.
He pulls up the log.
He remembers the voice of Earth.
He types furiously as the power dies.
He hits send.
The screen fades to black.
The End.

Let's write.

(Self-Correction during writing): Make sure the "cursing" feels earned. Not just for the sake of it, but to show how much he's suffering.

Themes check:

Isolation: The physical separation.
Sacrifice: The power is for the message, not survival.
Connection: The message is the only thing left.
Word count management: If it drags, speed up the action of typing. If it drags, slow down for the sensory details of the memory.

(Proceeding to generate output based on these steps.)

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